Another point which I forgot to mention in my previous E-mail about the subject: I urge everyone to consider carefully changes in the look and feel in this area. Especially if Brian Beck is not a regular Hebrew user.
I still remember the debacle in one of the versions of AbiWord few years ago. One day, someone with good intentions implemented a feature in AbiWord, which caused Hebrew letters at word ends to automatically assume their final form, if they had any - like in Arabic. The problem was that unlike Arabic, in Hebrew there are cases in which one wants to leave a letter in word's end at its non-final form (for example, in acronyms). Due to this, the "feature" ironically rendered that particular version of AbiWord unusable for Hebrew wordprocessing. After outcry, the "feature" was removed. The feature implementor did not take into account the fact that in Hebrew, the 5 final form letters have their own code points and their own keys in the keyboard and people are already used to type them at word ends. Unlike Jonathan (who at least asked us), the guy (whom I'm leaving unnamed) sinned in not first asking actual Hebrew users about the potential utility of the "feature". --- Omer On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 19:13 +0200, Omer Zak wrote: > Hello Jonathan, > I think that visual caret motion with logical selection is the best > approach. I do not see visual selection as an useful feature at all (at > least if it means what I understand it to mean). ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]